10 Questions for Musician Peter Jobson

10 QUESTIONS FOR MUSICIAN PETER JOBSON I Am Kloot's laconic bass player on poetry, punks, Elbow and the new album

I Am Kloot's laconic bass player on poetry, punks, Elbow and the new album

Over the past 12 years I Am Kloot have quietly built up a faithful legion of fans who look to the poetic lyrics of lead singer John Bramwell for inspiration and comfort. Sky at Night (2010) won them a Mercury Nomination for its smoky, late-night reflections. It was a slight departure from their normal fare, with a cohesive theme and full arrangements. Partly responsible for the sound were old friends, Guy Garvey (pictured below) and Craig Potter from Elbow, who produced it.

Great Night Out, ITV1

GREAT NIGHT OUT, ITV1 North-western comedy proves a roaring success

Stock characters in northern comedy drama fail to charm

Judging by those associated with Great Night Out, it looked like ITV had found the successor to acclaimed thirtysomething drama Cold Feet. It has the same production team behind The Worst Week of My Life - one of the funniest programmes in BBC Comedy's recent output - additional material by playwright Jonathan Harvey, who is responsible for some punchily witty scripts in Coronation Street, and a cast of talented actors.

CD: Everything Everything – Arc

Fidgety, exasperating second album from 2011 Mercury nominees

Up to this point it’s all gone swimmingly for Manchester-based quartet Everything Everything. Their debut album Man Alive charted high in the summer of 2010, but follow-up Arc is the test of whether they’re in for the long haul. Although the answer is largely in the hands of their strong fan base, the unfocused Arc suggests the band themselves aren’t sure of who they are.

The Fall, Islington Assembly Hall

THE FALL, ISLINGTON ASSEMBLY HALL The shamanic Mark E Smith and his band on exhilaratingly good form

The shamanic Mark E Smith and his band on exhilaratingly good form

Support bands tend to get short shrift, but it would be criminal not to give Evil Blizzard their due here. Made up of three bass guitarists with assorted effects pedals and a drummer who also sang, three members of the band were in pink pyjamas and wearing masks, while the fourth was in black leather and a Hawkwind hairdo. They produced industrial levels of noise around steady riffs and a variety of filthy bass sounds.

Imagine - Jeanette Winterson: My Monster and Me, BBC One

An unusual life touched upon episodically delivers a remarkably full portrait

You could hardly wish for a better subject for Imagine than Jeanette Winterson. When we see her at the Edinburgh book festival, promoting her recent autobiography Why Be Happy When You Can Be Normal?, she’s got the audience eating out of her hand: they get the full "experience". Elsewhere, though, she’s quieter, reflecting on a short enough life - born in 1959, she’s only just over the half-century mark – that has been so full that Roger Parsons’ immaculate 80-minute programme took a 25-year intermission in the middle.

Rats' Tales, Royal Exchange, Manchester

RATS' TALES, ROYAL EXCHANGE, MANCHESTER Carol Ann Duffy's children's stories and other dark fairy tales make festive fare

Carol Ann Duffy's children's stories and other dark fairy tales make festive fare

Having 30 “rats” running around hardly seems the stuff of festive fare, but since the begetter of the show is Carol Ann Duffy, known in her children’s writing for dark fairy tales, we might expect something different. And, after all, these rodents are actually local children dressed as ragamuffins. Rats, it seems, can be cute and not necessarily baddies – and, in any case, the Pied Piper is at hand.

Orpheus Descending, Royal Exchange, Manchester

PHILIP RADCLIFFE ON ORPHEUS DESCENDING Imogen Stubbs is electric in a major revival of Tennessee Williams' complex classic

Tennessee Williams' complex classic rewards major revival

Oh, how it’s raining. Streaming down the windows of the dry goods store, Torrance Mercantile, in the Deep South, where Lady Torrance is marooned in a stiflingly small town and a loveless marriage with an awful secret. Depressing. “We’re under a lifelong sentence to solitary confinement in our own lonely skins,” says 30-year-old drifter Val Xavier in his snakeskin jacket, holding onto his only companion in his wanderings, his precious, celebrity-signed guitar.

Theorin, Hallé, Stenz, Bridgewater Hall, Manchester

Wagnerian curtain-raiser to Bruckner epic starts bicentenary celebrations

It is considerate of Manchester’s two professional symphony orchestras to have organised their opening Wagner celebration salvoes so that they dovetail so neatly. The BBC Philharmonic opened their season three weeks ago with the Wesendonck Lieder, famously inspired by the composer’s infatuation with Mathilde, the wife of his wealthy sponsor Otto Wesendonck, and featuring those two well-known studies for Tristan und Isolde, "Im Treibhaus" (In the Hothouse) and "Traume" (Dreams).